Joshua Brindle has announced the latest release of the SELinux Userspace package, available from the developer site. Updates in this release include support for Python 3 in its language bindings, separation of tunables and booleans and enhancements to the Sandbox.

Security Enhanced (SE) Android is a project to identify and address critical gaps in the security of Android. Initially, the SE Android project is enabling the use of SELinux in Android in order to limit the damage that can be done by flawed or malicious apps and in order to enforce separation guarantees between apps. However, the scope of the SE Android project is not limited to SELinux.

SE Android is currently available as source code. Instructions on building and installing the project may be found at the project web page.

Wind River has announced the launch of an EAL4+ certified embedded Linux OS, Wind River Linux Secure. The certification platform is ARM, “including hardware from Texas Instruments, Intel and Power architectures”. SELinux is utilized for mandatory access control. This is the first commercial embedded Linux OS to receive this level of certification.

Chad Sellers has announced the latest release of the SELinux userspace suite. This version includes support for on-the-fly sandboxing of applications (including X apps), support for building with GCC 4.6, ‘newrole’ support for libcap-ng, and several robustness enhancements.

Chris PeBenito has announced the release of the latest version of Reference Policy. This is primarily a maintenance release, but includes new support for several packages, including cgroup, livecd and hadoop.

Tresys have announced version 20100525 of the SELinux userspace suite. Changes in this version include the ability to enable or disable semodule support, generation of ‘dontaudit’ rules via audtit2allow, improved documentation and improved support across different distributions. Source packages may be downloaded here, with the entire repository also available via git.